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July 25, 2008

Avoiding Home Business Scams In Your Job Search

by David Gates

Looking online for a job where you can work from home typically brings about the same results: You search for a job you feel you qualify to do. In a matter of seconds, a long list of links comes up. The problem? Most of the results are obvious scams.

Anyone with any common sense can basically ignore them all, so it was only a matter of time before the scammers found a simple way to work around it. They do this simply by making the job look official all the way until you send them your resume.

You’ll receive a response pretty quickly - the perpetrators of home business scams don’t waste any time - and know it is a scam. Why? Because the information they’ll send you back is now offering ridiculous amounts of pay for very little work, and looks nothing like the \”normal\” job you sent away your personal information for.

So what can you, the intelligent job searcher do? The answers are simple.

The first thing you can do is to email the company and ask about the job opening before you send in your resume. You will once again be able to tell the difference from their response. If you do decide to send in your resume first, make sure you delete any personal information such as your contact numbers, address, etc.

The only information that has to be on your first resume is an email address and your name. If you are applying to an actual company for a real job opening, they will be able to tell if you are qualified by your job history and other information without needing to know your personal contact information until they are ready to hire you.

It makes no sense that anyone who initially was going to take an at home job for 9 dollars an hour would really believe they could do the same thing for a hundred times that amount. One has to wonder how many people actually are suckered into these home business scams.

If you need to pay someone money in order for them to pay you money, you can basically count on them being scammers. That simply falls under the category of not making any sense at all. Be wary of these business practices along the whole process of finding work at home, and don’t let your guard down, even when they seem official.

Finally, remember the old saying that never loses any relevance: If something sounds too good to be true, it probably is. We all know that you have to work to make money, and working at home is no exception. It’s up to us to make sure the perpetrators of home business scams don’t waste our time and energy.

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Filed under Business Opportunity by David Gage

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